In the final book of the Consortium Rebellion, Chaos Reigning, Catarina the youngest of the von Hasenbergs, takes center stage when the survival of not only her house but the whole Consortium is at stake. Catarina is used to being dismissed by others, hiding her sharp mind and unexpected strength behind frivolous conversations and colorful accessories.
Review: Chaos Reigning, by Jessie Mihalik
[fa icon="calendar'] May 20, 2020 9:45:00 AM / by Ana Coqui posted in review
Review: Guarding Temptation, by Talia Hibbert
[fa icon="calendar'] May 14, 2020 9:45:00 AM / by Melanie posted in review
Guarding Temptation was previously published as a short story titled Resisting Desire in the Rogue Nights anthology. The new and updated version has been revised to double the original story so if you’ve already read the original version, there’s a lot more to the story of Nina and James in this novella.
Review: He's Come Undone, an Anthology
[fa icon="calendar'] May 11, 2020 9:54:45 AM / by Melanie posted in review
Here’s the thing about anthologies. They usually contain a couple of good stories that anchor the collection and a couple of middling to forgettable stories that might just get skimmed. However, He’s Come Undone features five incredibly strong, nuanced, sweet romances featuring five of the brightest voices in romance today. The connective thread that ties these stories together is that they feature buttoned-up, rather stuffy heroes who embark on unexpected romances with people who help them to, well, become undone.
Mini-Reviews, 5/8/20 Edition
[fa icon="calendar'] May 8, 2020 2:47:05 PM / by Suzanne posted in review
Mini-reviews of Flying Gold, Shift Out of Luck, Time of Our Lives, and House of Salt and Sorrows. So that's an f/m adult contemporary romance, an f/m paranormal, an f/m YA contemporary and an f/m gothic fantasy.
Review: The Rogue of Fifth Avenue, by Joanna Shupe
[fa icon="calendar'] May 5, 2020 9:45:00 AM / by Melanie posted in review
Let me begin by saying that The Rogue of Fifth Avenue was my very first Joanna Shupe and it definitely won’t be my last. I already have the next book ready to go and have pre-ordered the final book in the series.
Review: The Iron Crown, by M.A. Grant
[fa icon="calendar'] Apr 27, 2020 9:45:00 AM / by Suzanne posted in review
The Iron Crown is the third book in M.A. Grant's m/m fantasy romance series and I think it's my favorite. The first book is enemies-to-lovers and contains a fair bit of torture and a brewing war. The second is friends?-to-lovers and again... torture and war violence. This one contains a friendship-to-lovers romance SEVEN HUNDRED YEARS in the making. Lugh's human bodyguard/best friend Keiran has been by his side since Lugh was a young teen and rebuffed Lugh's sexual advances once when Lugh was an older teen. And then 700 years passed and Lugh is still convinced that Keiran wants nothing romantic from him. They sleep next to each other every night, they comfort and encourage each other, they do everything a long-term couple would do. And they're absolute idiots. Seriously. 700 years of pining.
Review: Strange Love, by Ann Aguirre
[fa icon="calendar'] Apr 23, 2020 9:45:00 AM / by Melinda posted in review
For a book that features an alien abduction of the female main character, Strange Love may actually contain one of the sweetest love stories I’ve read recently. Beryl, and her dog, Snaps, are accidentally (seriously) kidnapped from Earth by Zylar and brought to his home planet. They are fitted with translator chips and to my incredible delight this means Snaps can talk. Every wonderful thing you’re imagining your dogs saying? Snaps says. I can’t count how many times I snorted with laughter.
Series Review: Final Hour, by Juno Rushdan
[fa icon="calendar'] Apr 20, 2020 9:45:00 AM / by Ana Coqui posted in review
A great romantic suspense series needs to be able to balance romantic tension and pulse-pounding action, sustaining the momentum throughout the whole book, while crafting a believable resolution to both the intrigue and the romance. Juno Rushdan’s Final Hour series, packed with spy-thriller staples, secret installations, high-stakes interventions, coupled with fascinating characters and intense plotting delivered a great adrenaline rush and romantic punch. It is rare to be as invested in both the romantic and action story-lines as I was when reading the Final Hour series, but neither the action and romantic tension ever flagged.
Mini-Reviews, 4/16/20 Edition
[fa icon="calendar'] Apr 16, 2020 9:45:00 AM / by Suzanne posted in review
Mini-reviews of How to Love Your Elf, Inked With A Kiss, Crave and Witches of Ash and Ruin. So that's a f/m adult fantasy romance, an f/f contemporary, a f/m YA paranormal and an f/f YA paranormal/fantasy/horror.
Review: The Happy Ever After Playlist, by Abby Jimenez
[fa icon="calendar'] Apr 13, 2020 9:45:00 AM / by Suzanne posted in review
The Happy Ever Playlist opens with a near-miss: Sloan almost hits a dog that runs out into the street. (No dogs were harmed in the production of this novel.) When a policeman pulls her over, she ends up taking in the obviously neglected dog to save him from the pound and then she tries to find the dog's real owner. Many phone calls later, she finally hears back from Jason, a singer-songwriter who's been on location in Australia and without cell service and left his dog, Tucker, with a person who turns out to be horrible and left after just a couple of days.